
Couldn't get a slice of Apple's pie
By Jo Best
Published: 10 March 2005 16:40 GMT
Virgin Electronics is closing it doors less than a year after refocusing on digital music devices.
Company representatives confirmed the shuttering. The Virgin Group-funded company moved from New York to Silicon Valley in July of last year to draw more talent to its creative digital products.
At the time, Virgin Electronics CEO Greg Woock commented that the digital audio market was still wide open.
"The digital music market is in its infancy and there's plenty of room for innovation - especially from a strong, branded alternative," Woock said in a statement. Virgin Electronics set out to distinguish itself through particular attention to the consumer experience and to innovation.
However, the field became quickly crowded. The runaway success of Apple's iPod line of music players brought more companies to the market, and many big names such as Dell, Sony and Creative Labs are squeezing out smaller rivals.
"Distribution is the key to the market now, and there's iPod and everyone else," said Stephen Baker, an analyst with retail tracker NPD Techworld. "Without a unique story, it's hard for any player to get shelf space. They had a couple of good deals - one with Target - but they were never able to make a dent in the market."
Virgin's closing is effective immediately, with all products discontinued. The company said it will honour warranties on previously purchased devices.
Richard Shim writes for CNET News.com
This company is a global market leader because of their innovation, attention to detail and market strategy. SAP BW Designer The Global Face of ...
Including customer Contact strategy definition (B2B or B2C); Customer Contact efficiency identification including self service strategies (IVR and ...
Music Company. A developer with full project life cycle experience is needed to join a team supporting the worlds online music research and licensing ...
CIO Agenda 2008
The exclusive silicon.com CIO Agenda 2008 survey looks at the CIO's tech shopping list for the year, examines whether IT budgets are rising or falling and reveals what the pain points are for tech chiefs this year. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
silicon.com Dear silicon.com... ZX Spectrum nostalgia, Mac attack, tag a bag… Reader Comments of the Week
Steve Ranger Editor's Blog: Home computing from Acorn, Amiga and Amstrad, to the ZX Spectrum Nostalgia 2.0...